Yorkshire Post

Abbey bid approved in spite of objections

- DAVID SPEREALL LOCAL DEMOCRACY REPORTER

A HISTORIC abbey in Yorkshire’s biggest city has been granted an events and alcohol licence despite fears from locals that it could turn the historic site into a “theme park”.

Leeds City Council, which runs Kirkstall Abbey and its grounds, has been given year-round permission to stage plays, organised dancing, film exhibition­s and play music between the hours of 7am and 11pm. Alcohol can now also be served there every day between 11am and midnight.

But the local authority says that the licences will not be used every day and they are only looking to put on around 30 special events a year.

Despite objections from neighbours of the 900-year-old monastery, including one from a resident who said living close to it would become “unbearable”, councillor­s approved the applicatio­n.

Coun Gerald Wilkinson, who sits on the licensing sub-committee, said after the meeting: “We felt that there weren’t any extenuatin­g circumstan­ces which would prevent us from allowing the applicatio­n.

“There’s only going to be one event every couple of weeks and most of them will not finish too late. Most of them will be completed by 9pm.

“We felt it shouldn’t be too much of an imposition on the local residents.”

The abbey, which was founded in 1152, already hosts the annual Kirkstall Festival, as well as a handful of other children’s events during the year.

Tabling their objection to the licence before it was approved, one nearby resident said: “We cannot have doors or windows open and can still hear them, nor can we sit peacefully in the garden.

“As this type of event only occurs once or twice a year we put up with it but for it to happen on a more regular basis will be unbearable.

“Drunks shouting and screaming as they walk home and litter dropping – plus, on one occasion we caught someone urinating against the hedge in our drive, causing stains, who then got into the car at the side of the drive.”

Another wrote: “What is being proposed is truly a nightmare – almost turning the abbey into a theme park.”

Before this week’s meeting, West Yorkshire Police suggested the site needed extra CCTV and a more detailed plan on how it would prevent crime and disorder at events.

The council responded saying they would meet these requiremen­ts.

 ??  ?? A steel heart has been unveiled at Meadowhall shopping centre in Sheffield allowing people to engrave names on to the sculpture. Created by Steve Mehdi, the Heart of Steel is part of the wider Steel Man project which will be a landmark and a gateway to the region.
A steel heart has been unveiled at Meadowhall shopping centre in Sheffield allowing people to engrave names on to the sculpture. Created by Steve Mehdi, the Heart of Steel is part of the wider Steel Man project which will be a landmark and a gateway to the region.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom